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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Hello again. Welcome to Installment Two of Taking Care of Bill's Blog. Today, we hear from artist and banjo player Debby Kaspari.

Bill asked her to do some illustrations for Bird Watcher's Digest many years ago, and that relationship blossomed into a friendship that will endure many years into the future. Go to her web site. Just go. But pin your wig down, 'cause it'll blow off.--JZ

Spotted Antbird in the Panama understory- my best shot

I am not a bird photographer. Let me reinforce that: I’m a horrible bird photographer. I leave that to professionals like Bill and Julie.** But when I travel I want to bring back pictures, so I sketch. Drawing birds instead of using a camera has an upside and a downside, as you might guess, when it’s a birder’s primary image making method.

A study site in the forest on Barro Colorado Island- see the orange surveyor tape?

Barro Colorado is a former mountaintop now emerging as an island from the waters of the wide part of the Panama Canal, Lake Gatun. The Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute has preserved it as a field station for scientists who study everything from soil ecology to army ants to fish-eating bats. I go there with some regularity to get my tropical bird fix and keep my scientist husband company when he runs experiments in that wonderful tropical forest.

On BCI, Collared araçaris, Crested guans, Slaty-tailed trogons and other fancy charismatic birds are abundant and sometimes even sit out where you can watch them to your heart’s content. But the little brown jobs that I’m fond of, the xenops and the antshrikes and the leaftossers, birds that hang out in dense understory or clamber around gleaning from the undersides of leaves, are just about impossible to get in photos without blinds, strobe flashes, and a National Geographic photographer to hold the camera (an actual possibility on Barro Colorado Island- go look at your back issues). So what’s a bird lover to do? Sharpen the pencils, is what.

Spotted Antbirds in the Panama understory- one more time, with pencil.

In point of fact, drawing a bird forces you to really, really look. It takes patience and quality time, which you’ll spend with fewer birds, meaning forget the big trip list when you’re busy with the sketchbook. On the positive side of the equation is that the birds you sketch will be practically engraved in your memory and a good reference point from then on (“hmmm, it looks like that Rufous motmot I drew last week, but, wait, the chin’s green- must be a Broad-billed!”). By the way, don’t try this on an organized birding tour unless you want to get yourself thrown off a canopy tower.

Spotted Antbird in the Panama understory, in acrylic, beyond the reach of my point-and-shoot.

Next week I’ll be on BCI again, for twelve days of sketching, painting, and yes, I’ll be using my camera, too, on all those slow-moving leaves, lianas and tree roots which will show up in paintings, along with bird images made the slow way. In the meantime, if you’d like to read a little more about how to draw birds on the fly, here’s something to get you started:• 5 Steps To Better Bird Drawing

About Bill

Bill of the Birds

Bill Thompson III is the editor of Bird Watcher's Digest by day. He's also a keen birder, the author of many books, a dad, a field trip leader, an ecotourism consultant, a guitar player, the host of the "This Birding Life" podcast, a regular speaker/performer on the birding festival circuit, a gentleman farmer, and a fungi to be around. His North American life list is somewhere between 673 and 675. His favorite bird is the red-headed woodpecker. His "spark bird" was a snowy owl. He has watched birds in 25 countries and 44 states. But his favorite place to watch birds is on the 80-acre farm he shares with his wife, artist/writer Julie Zickefoose. Some kind person once called Bill "The Pied Piper of Birding" and he has been trying to live up to that moniker ever since.